Sunday, May 12, 2019

Jesus and the Father unite in care for us – John 10:27-30, Rev 7:9-17, Acts 13:43-51

4th Sunday of Easter, Year C; Holy Infant parish


“The Father and I are one,” Jesus tells the crowd. And that statement has led to all kinds of theologizing to try and make sense of what it can mean for Jesus, who certainly looked pretty human, to be able to say that. And the crystallization of a few hundred years of puzzling over that is what we say in our creed, what we mean when we confess Jesus is fully divine and fully human. It’s an amazing confession, when you think about it, that there’s nothing that authentic to being human that’s incompatible with divinity. That’s an amazingly daring statement about our created dignity, to which God longs to restore us, and to which God has acted in Christ to begin to restore us. It’s also an amazingly daring statement about God, the limitless God, who can hold creation in his fingertips, but consented to know limit, to know impairment, to know hunger and thirst and death all for love of us. That God, in His totally radically free will, wills to love us so much even when we turn away that He consents to know a thirst for us that He doesn’t have to.

Sunday, May 5, 2019

God always gives us a second chance – John 21:1-14, Rev 5:11-14

Third Sunday of Easter, Year C; Holy Infant parish.


Our God is a God of second chances. And not just second: third, fourth… there isn’t an ordinal so high that it could limit God’s love, stop God from continue to reach out to us, from bidding us cast our nets, and inviting us to breakfast; just as Jesus does with Peter, even after Peter denied him. The image of the net, full to bursting with fish, but not bursting, is an image of how plentiful and limitless God’s ongoing will to reach out to us is. A lot of commentators over the centuries have spilled a lot of ink (or, I guess, now, worn out a lot of keys on a lot of keyboards) trying to figure out quite why there were 153 fish. Some of these explanations are kind of fun. St. Jerome claimed that there were 153 species of fish, so 153 fish was a symbol for the church containing the full diversity of humanity. Unfortunately, there aren’t just 153 species of fish, and no one at that time seemed to think that either, except people that wanted to get this meaning out of John.  Other people have tried gematria, which is an ancient technique whereby you assign a number to each letter of the Hebrew alphabet and add up all the letters in a word or phrase. If you do that to the phrase “church of love,” you get 153, which is really cute. The problem is that neither John no anywhere else in the New Testament is the phrase “church of love” used, and there are all kinds of different phrases that would give you that number. My personal favorite explanation is that 153 is the sum of all the whole numbers from 1 to 17, and 17 is the sum of 10 and 7, two important numbers that represented fullness (think 10 commandments, 7 days of the week).